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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, issue 14</text>
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            <text>Bauer acting chancellor</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Bauer acting chancellor&#13;
The appointment of Otto F.&#13;
Bauer as Acting Chancellor of&#13;
Parkside was announced today&#13;
by UW System President John C.&#13;
Weaver. Irvin G. Wyllie, the&#13;
founding Chancellor of Parkside&#13;
in 1966, died Oct. 25 of an apparent&#13;
heart attack.&#13;
Bauer, 42, haser, 42, has been&#13;
Vice Chancellor, the second&#13;
ranking administrative position&#13;
at UW-P, since Sept. 1, 1971.&#13;
In his letter of appointment to&#13;
Bauer, President Weaver said, "I&#13;
am grateful for your willingness&#13;
to serve as we move through the&#13;
formal search and screen process&#13;
to find a successor to Irv Wyllie.&#13;
His untimely passing thrusts a&#13;
special obligation of those who&#13;
remain in leadership positions at&#13;
the campus. I pledge you the&#13;
support of our Central (Administration)&#13;
staff in this time of&#13;
leadership transition."&#13;
The new acting Chancellor&#13;
came to Parkside in 1971 from&#13;
Bowling Green (Ohio) University,&#13;
where he was Assistant Vice&#13;
President for Student Affairs, he&#13;
also had served as Assistant&#13;
Dean of the Graduate School and&#13;
Director of Graduate Admissions&#13;
and Fellowships at Bowling&#13;
Green.&#13;
Bauer took all three of his&#13;
degrees at Northwestern&#13;
University, receiving his Ph. D.&#13;
in 1959 in public address and&#13;
by Paul Anderson&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
Petitions for a declaratory&#13;
ruling filed on behalf of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc., (PSGA) on Oct.&#13;
15, 1974 seeking certain&#13;
declaratory rulings as on interpretation&#13;
of section 36.09 (5)&#13;
Wisconsin State Statutes, were&#13;
denied Friday, Nov. 1, by the&#13;
University of Wisconsin Board of&#13;
Regents in Madison.&#13;
The petitions, filed on behalf of&#13;
PSGA by John Siefert, a Kenosha&#13;
attorney, asked that the Regents&#13;
clarify the manner in which&#13;
students select representatives to&#13;
take part in institutional&#13;
governance, and compile for&#13;
presentation to the Chancellor a&#13;
budget involving the disposition&#13;
of student fees which support&#13;
campus student activities.&#13;
PSGA's petition came after the&#13;
Board of Regents instituted a set&#13;
of interim guidelines on merger&#13;
implementation drafted by&#13;
Central Administration. The&#13;
primary source of debate between&#13;
administrators and&#13;
students stemmed from a phrase&#13;
in the merger law which gives&#13;
students "primary responsibility&#13;
for the formulation and review of&#13;
policies concerning student life,&#13;
services and interests."&#13;
Specifically, student leaders&#13;
and chancellors disagreed on the&#13;
issue of determining the&#13;
allocation of student fees and on&#13;
who would designate&#13;
representatives to various&#13;
university committees.&#13;
PSGA's petition asked that the&#13;
"Regents declare that all&#13;
requisitions from the allocable&#13;
portion of the segregated&#13;
university fees made subsequent&#13;
to July 8.1974. be made only after&#13;
students selected by the Student&#13;
Otto F. Bauer&#13;
group communication. He taught&#13;
at the United States Air Force&#13;
Academy from 1959-1961, when he&#13;
joined the Bowling Green faculty.&#13;
He rose to full professor by 1968,&#13;
and was chosen Faculty Man of&#13;
the Year by a student-faculty&#13;
committee in 1967.&#13;
In 1969 Bauer was selected to&#13;
be an American Council on&#13;
Education administrative intern&#13;
at California-Berkeley, where he&#13;
served under both the Chancellor&#13;
and Vice Chancellor. At&#13;
Berkeley, he was directly involved&#13;
in a wide range of administrative&#13;
activities, including&#13;
supervision of the Student Affairs&#13;
Office during the Spring turmoil.&#13;
As Vice Chancellor, the Deans&#13;
Body at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside to participate&#13;
in institutional governance,&#13;
or their designees, sign or&#13;
certify that the requisition is&#13;
being made in accordance with&#13;
the policies concerning student&#13;
life, services, and interests."&#13;
The PSGA petition further&#13;
stipulated that the "Regents&#13;
declare vacant all students' seats&#13;
on committees involved on the&#13;
process of institutional governance&#13;
which have not been filled&#13;
according to the procedures set&#13;
forth in the Constitution of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc., or in the ByLaws&#13;
and resolutions adopted&#13;
pursuant to that constitution, but&#13;
instead have been filled by appointment&#13;
by the Chancellor of&#13;
the Dean of Students."&#13;
In addition, the petition asked&#13;
that the "Regents declare that all&#13;
committees involved in the&#13;
formulation, and, review of&#13;
policies concerning student life,&#13;
services and interests, have a&#13;
majority of student members."&#13;
Accordingly, the PSGA petition&#13;
asked that the Regents consult&#13;
with PSGA on the rules before&#13;
they are submitted for a public&#13;
hearing.&#13;
Regent President, Frank&#13;
Pelisek, Milwaukee, introduced&#13;
the resolution denying the&#13;
declaratory ruling, further citing&#13;
that "the president of the board&#13;
of University of Wisconsin&#13;
System shall advise the&#13;
petitioners in writing the denial&#13;
of such petitions in accordance of&#13;
section 22.6 of Wisconsin&#13;
statutes."&#13;
Pelisek further resolved that&#13;
"further inquiries of the matter&#13;
set forth shall be referred to the&#13;
administration of the University&#13;
•- en I intied on page 6&#13;
of the UW-P academic units, the&#13;
College of Science and Society&#13;
and The School of Modern Industry,&#13;
reported to Bauer, as did&#13;
the Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Student Services, the directors of&#13;
Library, Learning Center,&#13;
Athletics, Computing Center,&#13;
Secretary of the Faculty, and the&#13;
E d u c ati o n al O p por tun ity&#13;
coordinator. He represented the&#13;
campus to various state agencies&#13;
and to other parts of the&#13;
university.&#13;
He has leadership roles on both&#13;
UW System and campus committees,&#13;
including chairmanship&#13;
of the System-wide Ad Hoc&#13;
Committee for Student&#13;
Disciplinary Guidelines, the UWP&#13;
Campus Planning Committee&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
Regent Ed Hales, Racine, said&#13;
the first step in the process of&#13;
selecting a new chancellor for&#13;
Parkside will be the selection of a&#13;
Search and Screen Committee&#13;
(SSC). He-guessed this process&#13;
would take place within a month.&#13;
The committee will be made up&#13;
of faculty, administrators and&#13;
student(s) who will be appointed&#13;
by John Weaver, president of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin system.&#13;
Hales said the student(s) will&#13;
be selected from Parkside. He&#13;
also said that at least a majority&#13;
of the faculty will be selected&#13;
from Parkside and the administration&#13;
will probably come&#13;
and the UW-P Ten-Year&#13;
Academic Planning Committee.&#13;
UW System committees include&#13;
Academic Misconduct,&#13;
Health Science Task Force and&#13;
Medical Technology Advisory&#13;
group. He is a member of the&#13;
joint UW-Vocational Technical&#13;
Regional Council, the Allied&#13;
Health Education Coordinating&#13;
Council of southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin and the Administrative&#13;
Council of&#13;
University Extension.&#13;
Despite his busy administrative&#13;
schedule, he finds&#13;
time to teach a class in speech&#13;
each year at Parkside.&#13;
A full professor, Bauer is&#13;
widely published in the fields of&#13;
semantics and debate and has&#13;
from Parkside and Central&#13;
Administration.&#13;
The student(s) selected to&#13;
serve on the SSC will probably be&#13;
active in the University, such as&#13;
someone from the student&#13;
government, said Hales.&#13;
The size of the SSC varies, but&#13;
according to Hales the committee&#13;
would consist of possibly seven or&#13;
eight people.&#13;
"Anybody can nominate a&#13;
person for chancellor; a student,&#13;
housewife or businessman,"&#13;
Hales said. "The person may&#13;
simpjy send the SSC a name for&#13;
consideration and that person&#13;
will be contacted and asked for a&#13;
resume."&#13;
As far as qualifications for the&#13;
conducted a number of studies on&#13;
"the trust phenomenon" among&#13;
students, faculty and administrators.&#13;
He presented an&#13;
invited lecture on that subject at&#13;
Cornell University last Spring.&#13;
He has served as chairman of the&#13;
General Semantics Interest&#13;
Group of the Speech Communications&#13;
Association and as&#13;
an officer of "The Journal of the&#13;
American Forensic Association."&#13;
A Kenosha resident (6913-5th&#13;
Ave.), Bauer is a member of&#13;
Rotary West and on the Board of&#13;
Directors of Kenosha County&#13;
United Way. A native of Elgin,&#13;
111., and a former pilot and officer&#13;
in the Air Force, he is married&#13;
(Jeanette) and the father of two&#13;
boys (Steven 12 and Eric 8).&#13;
job are concerned, Hales said&#13;
that there are no set rules but&#13;
that Weaver and his staff would&#13;
probably establish the general&#13;
criteria.&#13;
The SSC will review and screen&#13;
applicants and a list of the top&#13;
candidates, consisting of not less&#13;
than three people, will be sent to&#13;
Weaver.&#13;
The President of the Board of&#13;
Regents will then appoint a&#13;
committee of Regents who, in&#13;
consultation with Weaver, will&#13;
select the chancellor of Parkside.&#13;
With regard to the&#13;
qualifications required for&#13;
chancellor, Allen Dearborn,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor of Students,&#13;
continued on page 7&#13;
Regents honor Wyllie&#13;
by Paul Anderson&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
"THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that on the&#13;
sad occasion of his untimely death on October 25,&#13;
1974, the members of the UW System Board of&#13;
Regents do hereby extend to his wife and family, as&#13;
well as to the entire Parkside campus community,&#13;
their deep personal sympathy, and in sending this&#13;
message do transmit their sincere appreciation for&#13;
the many years of distinguished service given to the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System by Chancellor Irvin&#13;
G. Wyllie."&#13;
November 1,1974&#13;
Board of Regents&#13;
A lull of silence settled over Room 1820 Van Hise&#13;
Hall on the UW-Madison campus Friday morning,&#13;
Nov. 1, as members of the UW-Board of Regents,&#13;
chancellors and administrators from throughout&#13;
the system and various visitors and representatives&#13;
of t he press rose and stood in silence, paying a final&#13;
tribute to the late Irvin G. Wyllie, former Chancellor&#13;
of Parkside.&#13;
The late Chancellor Wyllie, 54, died October 25,&#13;
1974, after having served as Chancellor for the&#13;
Parkside campus since its birth in 1966.&#13;
Following the Regent's tribute honoring Wyllie,&#13;
Regent President Frank Pelisek deviated from the&#13;
regular agenda and called upon Regent Ed Hales.&#13;
Racine, who introduced a resolution to the board-a&#13;
portion of which appears above.&#13;
Hales praised Wyllie's devotion to education as a&#13;
"disting uish ed teach er, histor ian , and administrator&#13;
who advanced the frontiers of&#13;
knowledge in his areas of intellectual interest."&#13;
In addition. Hales cited Wyllie as a man who&#13;
served "a leader- role in American higher&#13;
education as counselor to -many colleges and&#13;
universities, chaired the UW-Madison department&#13;
of history, and held professorships at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin, Missouri, and Maryland, as well a:&#13;
selection as a Ford Faculty Fellow and Fulbrigh&#13;
Lecturer."&#13;
Hales spoke highly of the steps taken by Wyllie t(&#13;
transform "the dream of comprehensivt&#13;
educational opportunity in southeastern Wisconsir&#13;
into the reality of a University of Wisconsin cam&#13;
pus. Hales added that the "founding chancellor'!&#13;
vigor, dedication . . 4 compassion, candor anc&#13;
courage," were attributes which "marked both hi:&#13;
personal and professional life and were tin&#13;
hallmarks of his administration in the face of dif&#13;
ficult decisions."&#13;
The motion offered by Hales was seconded by th&lt;&#13;
entire board and unanimously adopted.&#13;
Shortly thereafter, UW President John C. Weave:&#13;
announced to the board that he had appointed Ott&lt;&#13;
F. Bauer as acting chancellor of Parkside, citinj&#13;
that "I appoint him as acting chancellor withou&#13;
reservation and with full confidence that he will no&#13;
only provide interim administration to that campus&#13;
but will carry the campus progress forward.&#13;
In addition, Weaver assured members of thi&#13;
board, as well as acting administrators at Parkside&#13;
that 'As quickly as we can do so, vie&#13;
President Donald Smith and I will be instituting th&lt;&#13;
appropriate search and screen procedures for ;&#13;
permanent appointment at that campus."&#13;
In other board action, a proposal to build a $4.&#13;
million Modern Industry Building at Parkside wa,&#13;
reinstated in the 1975-77 UW building budget by a 9-&#13;
vote. The Friday vote overruled action takei&#13;
Tuesday by the board's" Physical Planning an&lt;&#13;
Development Committee, which voted to defer tfo&#13;
project for possible consideration in its 1976 budge&#13;
review. The Regents' vote reinstates the building t&#13;
its 10th priority rank in the 1975-77 building budget&#13;
Thic ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
— Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1974 Vol. Ill No. 14&#13;
Students on SSC&#13;
Thumbs down to psga Picking Q chancellor&#13;
Regents&#13;
rule &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov 6&#13;
•Editorial/Opinion.&#13;
Lett er s t o t he E r fi tf f r&#13;
Editor's Note: RANGER has printed the following letter and form&#13;
because we feel the establishment of a strong organizaZ&#13;
representing the third world is a necessity at Parkside. RANGER does&#13;
not feel obliged to print at the request of organizations but only those&#13;
items we feel are important to the campus.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Recently, Third World&#13;
Organization, mailed out a&#13;
questionaire titled; "To All&#13;
Concern Students". The purpose&#13;
of this questionaire was to find&#13;
out multi-cultural students interests.&#13;
This survey was to be&#13;
used for the future planning of&#13;
events sponsored by Third World.&#13;
On the questionaire there were&#13;
two locations; Red Pyramid and&#13;
the Information Desk, Third&#13;
World World boxes were put at&#13;
both places. Within a two day&#13;
span both boxes disappeared.&#13;
What happened to the boxes?&#13;
Third World would like to know.&#13;
The boxes were clearly labeled&#13;
with the organization's name,&#13;
therefore maintainance people&#13;
should have not moved them.&#13;
Students what happened to the&#13;
boxes?&#13;
Third World, not to be stopped&#13;
by any small inconviences, wants&#13;
the questionaire printed in the&#13;
TO ALL CONCERNED STUDENTS:&#13;
We have organized a club called "The Third World&#13;
Organization."&#13;
Our purpose is to unite the multi-cultural students who&#13;
want to see changes that are needed in student activities&#13;
at Par-.side. The organization will be meeting every&#13;
Thursday at 12:30 p.m. in room D174 until further&#13;
notification is made.&#13;
If you would like to become involved, please write a time&#13;
that will be suitable for you to attend future meetings.&#13;
The time most suitable for&#13;
is&#13;
(name) (time) (day)&#13;
WOULD LIKE FOR YOU TO ANSWER THESE&#13;
QUESTIONS AND DROP THIS FORM IN A BOX AT&#13;
THE INFORMATION BOX - or - AT "THE PYRAMID."&#13;
1. Do you want to see fellow students of various racialethnic&#13;
groups involved in the student government'&#13;
YES NO&#13;
2. Are you willing to voice YOUR rights on this campus'&#13;
YES NO&#13;
3. Would you like to read more about multi-cultural&#13;
campus life and other activities related to students of&#13;
various ethnic backgrounds printed in "The Ranqer"?&#13;
YES NO&#13;
4. Attended a good dance, concert, or good entertainment&#13;
on campus lately? YES&#13;
NO&#13;
5. If there were activities available would you get involved&#13;
in these multi-cultural interests' YES&#13;
NO&#13;
6. Do you have any ideas for activities pertaining to&#13;
multi-cultural interests? YES NO&#13;
WHAT ARE YOUR IDEAS???&#13;
7. Would you like to get involved in&#13;
organization? YES&#13;
Ranger. By this publication of the&#13;
questionaire, "To All Concern&#13;
Students", any student may&#13;
reply. And the ones that received&#13;
the mailed letters, are advised to&#13;
personally give your answered&#13;
reply to any member of Third&#13;
World organization.&#13;
The temporary officers are&#13;
N.Haynes, A. Martin, N. Jones,&#13;
V. Napus, L. Vinson, N. Foiling,&#13;
L. Wagner, and T. Jones.&#13;
Students not knowing any one&#13;
from the names above should&#13;
bring their reply to D174 at 12:30,&#13;
Thursday Nov. 7. (D174 is&#13;
directly across from the information&#13;
desk.)&#13;
Also anyone who would like to&#13;
copy and answer the questionaire&#13;
on note-book paper; including&#13;
your name and time best for&#13;
attending meetings, are encouraged&#13;
to do so. Your ideas will&#13;
be given deep consideration by&#13;
the group.&#13;
A. Martin&#13;
Vice-Pres., Third World.&#13;
Point of view&#13;
Crutches&#13;
Legalize Marijuana-a commonly heard phrase these&#13;
days. Bronson Laxollette calls for the&#13;
"decriminalization" of possession of Mary Jane. Ad&#13;
rightly so. We have decriminalized alcoholism and&#13;
society allows all types of self abuse-why not this one.&#13;
Pot smokers claim that there is no physical damage to&#13;
the user. At this point it is impossible to prove that extended&#13;
use of this drug causes ill effects. Only the widespread&#13;
use of grass by a large segment of the population&#13;
over a period of years will supply the necessary&#13;
statistical data to show if marijuana is "safe".&#13;
Possible ill effects aside: our society allows the&#13;
alcoholic to abuse himself, his surroundings and&#13;
ultimately all of us. Are we justified in not allowing pot&#13;
smokers the same right? We assume the responsibilities&#13;
of the nine million alcoholics among us-we surely can&#13;
sustain a few million high-seekers.&#13;
To those smokers among our readers that may decry&#13;
the relationship drawn between alcohol and marijuana—&#13;
physically there may be no relationship, but&#13;
psychologically? The alcoholic craves the next shot-the&#13;
next jug of wine-needs it to survive the day. The&#13;
pothead marks the day by the times he can sneak off to&#13;
gain another "high".&#13;
Is there much difference if the crutch be made of&#13;
walnut or maple? Alcohol or marijuana: those that&#13;
would abuse one would abuse the other.&#13;
So legalize marijuana; those that need the crutch of a&#13;
high w.l go to any extreme to find it-prohibition proved&#13;
hat. Only after legalization will we begin to transfer the&#13;
thP rPh^iT^ b&#13;
//u&#13;
hG incarcerati&#13;
°n of pot smokers to&#13;
the rehabilitation of those who need the out of a drug.&#13;
a multi-cultural&#13;
NO&#13;
The ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
uT'p-ST&#13;
thVnterests&#13;
' °Pin&#13;
'ons, and concerns of' the fsr w s rn-&#13;
^&#13;
arl&#13;
Wisconsin siun Pl ' _ ^ Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295, 553-2287.&#13;
Editor Kenneth Pestka&#13;
Advertising Manager John Sacket&#13;
Business Manager Steve Johnson&#13;
Managing Editor Greg Hawkins&#13;
News Editor Michael Olszyk&#13;
Humanities Editor amy cundari&#13;
Copy Editor Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
p&#13;
*"'&#13;
Dave Dretzka, Mike Nepper °&#13;
hm'&#13;
§ V s&#13;
KEM6 &#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Doston on multicultural Mfiofy&#13;
A professor comments&#13;
#1 &lt;n&#13;
James DuRell Smith Jr.&#13;
^ reIS&#13;
K Y&#13;
1&#13;
0U'YE&#13;
d&#13;
G0T Y0UR UPS AND DOWNS? Take a ride on&#13;
e,rr!;°i&#13;
Be first kid&#13;
°&#13;
n y&#13;
°&#13;
ur bi&#13;
°&#13;
ck to ride the iibrar&#13;
y&#13;
then he hu aTih ' Stare at 3 closed door for thirty seconds and&#13;
" s&#13;
h&#13;
"&#13;
rdled down to 2-D for free, with no fuss, no bother, no buttons&#13;
to press Our circus ride for roaming readers is brought to you through&#13;
Uiecourtesy of an unknow benefactor to be found somehwere along the&#13;
underetandatde8&#13;
" ^ pr&#13;
°&#13;
duction&#13;
-&#13;
His desire to remain anonymous is&#13;
RESULTS, I LIKE RESULTS! Not two days after this paper printed&#13;
comment on the obscure philosophy of Parkside pavement planning&#13;
^&#13;
uly bad the unadulterated joy of walking from the&#13;
Tallent Hall parking lot to the door of the SAB via a sidewalk that&#13;
o lowed the path through the grass that people had worn through&#13;
taking the logical route. Oh, unparalledled pleasure!&#13;
ALL KIDDING ASIDE. Have you ever wondered why you're asked&#13;
to take a shower before going into the pool? I never would have&#13;
believed it and almost don't now, even after it's happened a dozen&#13;
times or more, but if I'm swimming along free-style in a deserted&#13;
(except for me and guards) pool and cannot see anything but a blurr, if&#13;
someone who needs a shower jumps in without having taken one, I can&#13;
smell it in the water soon after. Amazing perhaps, but where do men&#13;
think their deodorant goes? And women their hairspray? I can tell&#13;
you, before it gets to the filters, it goes all over the pool. Those who&#13;
should enforce rules that are made for all but don't think they're doing&#13;
somebody a favor. I would ask them to think again.&#13;
AND YOU TEL L TERRY&#13;
T H A T J F E E L L I K E&#13;
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posters on campus in spar e time. Send&#13;
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Coordinator of Campi^ Representatives,&#13;
P.O. Box 1384. Ann Arbor, Ml 48106.&#13;
by Carole Wilson&#13;
"You're kidding!" was the&#13;
thought that crossed the mind of&#13;
at least one student when a&#13;
young, black man announced he&#13;
was Glenn Doston the instructor&#13;
of "Teaching for the&#13;
Multicultural Society." Why such&#13;
a stupified reaction? Well, apparently&#13;
few students and even&#13;
faculty are aware that there are&#13;
black professors teaching fulltime&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
According to Doston, another&#13;
student's father, upon hearing&#13;
that "one of those people" was&#13;
instructing one of her classes,&#13;
refused to pay anymore of her&#13;
tuition at Parkside. These are&#13;
precisely some things Doston&#13;
wants to get out and rap on in his&#13;
classes.&#13;
His classes include Society and&#13;
School, Values Clarification and&#13;
Affective Education, and&#13;
Teaching for the Multicultural&#13;
Society. All these classes, in&#13;
essence, deal with peoples'&#13;
beliefs or values. Schools play an&#13;
important part in developing and&#13;
sustaining our society and he&#13;
feels the quality of the teacher&#13;
will reflect the quality of our&#13;
society.&#13;
When asked what he essentially&#13;
hoped to accomplish in his&#13;
classes he commented,&#13;
"basically what we're doing in&#13;
the Values Clarification and&#13;
Affective Education course is&#13;
placing ourselves under a&#13;
microscope and using an array of&#13;
value strategies to find our where&#13;
they come, why we have certain&#13;
values, how we got our values&#13;
and to give us a chance to think&#13;
about the kind of people we are,&#13;
and also to show people that they&#13;
don't necessarily have to have&#13;
the same values that other people&#13;
have, but to at least respect each&#13;
others' values."&#13;
In the classroom Doston relates&#13;
to his experiences and draws out&#13;
the students to discuss openly&#13;
by Greg Hershman&#13;
I have a new plan for saving&#13;
gasoline.&#13;
Up until now, the President and&#13;
everybody else has been telling&#13;
us to slow down on the highway.&#13;
This, they say, will help conserve&#13;
gas because a car uses less gas at&#13;
50 mph than at 70 mph.&#13;
At first glance this may seem&#13;
like the right answer but one&#13;
small item is left out. At 50 mph&#13;
fewer people are killed than at 70&#13;
mph which means that there will&#13;
be more people driving.&#13;
What should be done instead is&#13;
how they feel about experiences&#13;
they have had. During 1968 a nd&#13;
69, he was a Second Lieutenant&#13;
Tank Unit Commander patrolling&#13;
the Czechoslovakia!! border&#13;
during the Russian occupation.&#13;
After going through U.S. Intelligence&#13;
School in Maryland he&#13;
spent approximately a year in&#13;
Vietnam as an advisor to Vietnamese&#13;
soldiers. Some of his&#13;
values changed because of experiences&#13;
that took place during&#13;
this time in his life.&#13;
Upon being discharged from&#13;
the Army, Doston re-entered&#13;
Southern University, where he&#13;
had gotten his B.A. in 1968. In&#13;
1972, he completed his Masters in&#13;
Social Science, then applied and&#13;
was accepted at Northwestern&#13;
University in Evanston, Illinois&#13;
where he received his Ph. D. in&#13;
Social Science Education this&#13;
past August.&#13;
That is where he met Marvin&#13;
Happel, an Assistant Professor of&#13;
Education at Parkside. Happel&#13;
was instrumental in Doston's&#13;
applying here through informing&#13;
him of the positions available.&#13;
When asked how he felt about&#13;
the "honor" bestowed upon him&#13;
as one of Parkside's first fulltime&#13;
teaching black professors of&#13;
Education, Doston replied, "I&#13;
think through Paul Kleine, the&#13;
Division Chairman of Education,&#13;
and other members in the&#13;
Division of Education, that we'll&#13;
see this trend continue, where&#13;
Parkside will have minority&#13;
people, black and brown, in other&#13;
areas of the university. I think&#13;
they're headed that way, at least&#13;
I hope so."&#13;
Concerning Parkside students&#13;
and the area in which the&#13;
university is located, Doston&#13;
said, "It's the kind of situation&#13;
where I like the kind of students&#13;
that basically we have at&#13;
Parkside. I think the communities,&#13;
Racine and Kenosha,&#13;
are both workable communities.&#13;
"The Division of Education is&#13;
making efforts to become closer&#13;
to the communities, and through&#13;
efforts like these, the University&#13;
will be living up to their function,&#13;
to raise the speed limit to 120&#13;
mph. This would cause more&#13;
accidents which would mean&#13;
more deaths which would mean&#13;
fewer drivers.&#13;
When the number of drivers&#13;
gets down to two, I'll make you a&#13;
deal. You stay out of my way and&#13;
I'll stay out of yours.&#13;
that being to provide services for&#13;
the community to make it a&#13;
better place to live and to improve&#13;
the lots of people."&#13;
One of the services Parkside is&#13;
involved with is the Title Four&#13;
and Seven programs in the&#13;
Racine Unified School District. It&#13;
is a program of workshops&#13;
designed to help teachers,&#13;
students and parents adjust,&#13;
understand; in essense, prepare&#13;
for the desegregation plan being&#13;
instituted in the Racine Schools.&#13;
Doston is one of the workshop&#13;
leaders.&#13;
This is closely related to the&#13;
objectives Aimed for in&#13;
"Teaching for the Multicultural&#13;
Society" which Doston stated to&#13;
be, "where teachers and people&#13;
being certified for the teaching&#13;
profession can learn how to cope&#13;
with a growing multicultural&#13;
society."&#13;
"We can see that people have&#13;
numerous conflicts in our public&#13;
schools today and we're trying to&#13;
teach teachers how to handle&#13;
kids. Teaching them about the&#13;
different cultures and values&#13;
people have in different cultures.&#13;
"We try to establish a format in&#13;
this course where people can talk&#13;
about the racial issues, the drug&#13;
issues and the sexual issues. To&#13;
provide the kind of environment&#13;
where people will feel free to&#13;
express themselves.&#13;
"We try to provide the kind of&#13;
environment in which people will&#13;
not feel threatened by me or&#13;
other class members. We try to&#13;
reach honest conclusions and&#13;
discover ourselves.&#13;
"It's not a course where the&#13;
instructor presents the "model"&#13;
person to the students. It's a selfsearching&#13;
course, and hopefully,&#13;
through meaningful dialogue we&#13;
can resolve some of the problems&#13;
and help some teachers when&#13;
they enter the classrooms for the&#13;
first time, who don't have experiences&#13;
with different kinds of&#13;
ethnic groups they may have to&#13;
come in contact with as public&#13;
school teachers."&#13;
SHORECREST GEORGETOWN&#13;
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Brief News&#13;
Tuesday, November 5: Film, "Billy Jack," 7:30 p.m., Gr. 103. Admission&#13;
$1, Parkside I.D. required.&#13;
Wednesday, November 6: Whiteskellar presents Steve Miller, local&#13;
folksinger, in the coffeehouse, 1-3 p.m. Admission free.&#13;
Film, "Billy Jack," 7:30 p.m., Gr. 103. Admission $1. Parkside I.D.&#13;
required.&#13;
Thursday, November 7: There will be an organizational meeting of&#13;
the Women's Caucus at 12:30 in LLC D-174 (the lounge next to the&#13;
Information kiosk).&#13;
Friday, November 8: Hayrideand square dance. PAB presents "Git&#13;
Down to Some Fast-Stompin' Music and Rollin' in the Hay!" Square&#13;
dance instructions by a professional caller; contest (hog calling, apple&#13;
bobbing, best dancer); spiked cider! Admission $1, Parkside and state&#13;
I.D.'s required.&#13;
Sunday, November 10: Film, "Acapulco Gold," documentary on the&#13;
cultivation and distribution of marijuana in North America. A special&#13;
premiere showing at 8 p.m. in the SAB. Admission $1, open to the&#13;
public, state I.D. required.&#13;
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GO To &#13;
4 T H E PARKSIDE R ANGER Wednesday, N o v. 6, 1 9 7 4&#13;
WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 6&#13;
STUDENT CONCERT: Beginning at 3:30 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Admission is free and open to the public.&#13;
FILM: "Billy Jack" sponsored by the Parkside Activities Board at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in Greenquist Hall, room 103. Admission is $1.00. Parside&#13;
I-D. is required. One guest is permitted.&#13;
THURSDAY NOVEMBER7 CONCERT: Featuring the Parkside&#13;
Orchestra at 7:30 p.m. in the Communication Arts Theatre. Admission&#13;
is free and open to the public. The orchestra is conducted by Professor&#13;
David Littrell.&#13;
FRIDAY NOVEMBER 8 HAYRIDE AND SQUARE DANCE: Sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Activities Board, $1.00 includes the hayride&#13;
which departs from the Student Activities Bldg. and also the square&#13;
dance. The caller for the dance will also be teaching you as you dance.&#13;
Refreshments include beer, spiked cider.&#13;
SUNDAY NOVEMBER 10 RECITAL: Featuring Professor Stephen&#13;
Swedish, on piano at 7:30 p.m. in the Communication Arts Theatre.&#13;
Admission is free and open to the public.&#13;
FILM: "Acapulco Gold" sponsored by the Parkside Activities Board&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. in the Student Activities Bldg. Admission is $1.50 and open&#13;
to the public with proof of age required. Film on growing and harvesting&#13;
of pot in the United States and parts of Mexico. Premiere&#13;
showing.&#13;
SPECIAL EVENTS&#13;
TUESDAY NOVEMBER 12 JACKSON BROWNE CONCERT:&#13;
Sponsored by the Parkside Activities Board. 8:00 p.m. in the Physical&#13;
Education Bldg. gym. Tickets are $4.00 for Parkside students and $4.50&#13;
for the genral public. Tickets are available at the Information Center&#13;
LLC Main Place.&#13;
Trick or treating with Lou Reed&#13;
'Take a walk&#13;
on the wild side'&#13;
'Spoon River' next in Nov.&#13;
The Parkside players are&#13;
preparing their second&#13;
production of the year, Edgar&#13;
Lee Masters' Spoon River Anthology&#13;
under the direction of&#13;
Tom Reinert.&#13;
From Thursday, November 21&#13;
through Sunday, Nov. 24, the 10&#13;
actors and 2 singers will give life&#13;
to the deceased residents of&#13;
Spoon River, Illinois.&#13;
The cast includes Glen&#13;
Christensen, Mike Clickner,&#13;
Keith Gayhart, Charles Johnson,&#13;
Jody Jones, Kathy Kah, Jeff&#13;
Kiehlbach, Annette LoCante,&#13;
Nancy Johnson, Carrie Ward,&#13;
Michael Ward, and Susan Zietz.&#13;
A multi-level formal set has&#13;
been designed for the show by&#13;
Rick Ponzio. It will be executed&#13;
by the technical director Ted&#13;
Paone. The costumes have been&#13;
designed and will be executed by&#13;
June Christianson. The lighting&#13;
will be designed and executed by&#13;
Rudy Lineau. The stage manager&#13;
is Sue Wille. The other crews will&#13;
be announced Nov. 7.&#13;
by Cliff Chambers&#13;
It seemed like a lot of&#13;
Milwaukee mothers sent their&#13;
kids to the Lou Reed concert on&#13;
Halloween night rather than take&#13;
a chance on trick or treat candy.&#13;
It was a good choice since no one&#13;
died from arsenic poisoning at&#13;
the sold-out Auditorium. The&#13;
concert was billed as a costume&#13;
party and contest.&#13;
There were many gaily dressed&#13;
concert goers this night. Witches&#13;
and ghosts and pirates and&#13;
cowboys and police officers and&#13;
ushers and Sesame Street&#13;
characters and a carrot and a&#13;
white rabbit showed up for the&#13;
concert. The latter should have&#13;
appropriately received a ticket to&#13;
the upcoming Gracie Slick and&#13;
Jefferson Starship concert on&#13;
Nov. 15 at the Arena.&#13;
The Lou Reed concert started&#13;
with an eerie stage show which&#13;
let us know the bad news right&#13;
away-the P.A. system was&#13;
horrible. Anyway, the crowd was&#13;
more interested in each other's&#13;
costumes rather than the skit or&#13;
the magic show that followed.&#13;
Without a decent P.A. system,&#13;
the skit, magic show and winners&#13;
of the costume contest were&#13;
meaningless past the first 25 rows&#13;
of seats. The crowd was constantly&#13;
moving around. Thus the&#13;
crowd provided most of the show.&#13;
Another distraction was the&#13;
constant "anti-smoking" announcements&#13;
followed by leaving&#13;
some of the lights on. Hopefully,&#13;
the fire marshals could see how&#13;
badly the announcements were&#13;
being ignored.&#13;
After a long delay, Dr. John&#13;
and the Night Trippers was the&#13;
first band to appear. Dr. John&#13;
M&#13;
I&#13;
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From God's Country.&#13;
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isn't known for fine quality music&#13;
but he is known for putting out a&#13;
good stage show.&#13;
Halloween night proved to be&#13;
Dr. John's excuse for dressing&#13;
elaborately. Dr. John was&#13;
dressed in a white feather and&#13;
silver sequin suit with a beard&#13;
also full of sequin and glitter. The&#13;
bass player was dressed in zebra&#13;
stripes, the guitar player dressed&#13;
in a green and white puffball&#13;
pyramid, and the drummer in a&#13;
silver-aluminum costume with&#13;
antenaes. The two female&#13;
vocalists were dressed in red&#13;
print and in blue chiffon sparkles&#13;
respectively.&#13;
Dr. John's music was better&#13;
than expected. By the song, "Let&#13;
the Good Times Roll" the crowd&#13;
had started to boogie. Dr. John's&#13;
raspy voice cut through the&#13;
smoke bombs, streamers, steam&#13;
gushes, and glitter showers.&#13;
However, the P.A. system wasn't&#13;
going to allow 80 percent of the&#13;
crowd to understand the words. It&#13;
didn't matter much and the&#13;
crowd greatly appreciated his&#13;
one recognizable song, "Right&#13;
Place at the Wrong Time." Dr.&#13;
John finished in a hail of glitter&#13;
showers and smoke bombs and&#13;
the crowd called them back for&#13;
one more song. The party was in&#13;
full swing.&#13;
Another long delay while the&#13;
equipment changes were made.&#13;
Meanwhile, the crowd paraded&#13;
around looking at itself.&#13;
Then, Lou Reed burst upon the&#13;
stage and started out with "Sweet&#13;
Jane."&#13;
He received a tremendous&#13;
welcome from the crowd. He was&#13;
dressed in dark sunglasses, a&#13;
black T-shirt, and blue jeans. His&#13;
short peach-blond hair glistened&#13;
in the lights.&#13;
Lou Reed sings and acts out his&#13;
songs incredibly well, however,&#13;
he was plagued by the bad&#13;
acoustics in the auditorium. The&#13;
back-up band played very well&#13;
and made up for the loss of&#13;
clarity in the lyrics.&#13;
The second song Reed did was&#13;
"Vicious." He sang a long rendition&#13;
of it. Afterwards he slid&#13;
smoothly into "Ride, Sally Ride."&#13;
During this song the crowd&#13;
finally sat down to listen and&#13;
watch.&#13;
Next, Reed went through the&#13;
motions of finding a vein and&#13;
shooting up while doing the song,&#13;
"Heroin."&#13;
The subtleness of the conFREE&#13;
DELIVER Y&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
nection between "Heroin" and&#13;
the following song, "Kill Your&#13;
Sons" was lost by most of the&#13;
crowd. The apparent tolerance of&#13;
drugs displayed in "Heroin" was&#13;
rejected through the lyrics to&#13;
"Kill Your Sons." Had the&#13;
acoustics allowed the crowd to&#13;
hear the words, it might have&#13;
been more powerful.&#13;
The organ playing on "Kill&#13;
Your Sons" was especially good.&#13;
The best drumming came on&#13;
the sixth song, "N.Y. Stars" as&#13;
the yellow lights flashed and&#13;
reflected off the bald drummer's&#13;
head.&#13;
"Animal Language" was the&#13;
shortest song of the evening and&#13;
it was done well. "Sally Can't&#13;
Dance," the title song to Reed's&#13;
newest album, was the only time&#13;
the organ and lead players helped&#13;
out on the vocals. The song came&#13;
off well. After the cheering died&#13;
down, the bass player went into a&#13;
very exciting solo that led into&#13;
"Walk on the Wild Side."&#13;
An instance of mingling with&#13;
the audience happened during&#13;
this song. Reed sang "take a walk&#13;
on the wild side" while accepting&#13;
a strange-looking cigarette from&#13;
a person in the audience. He took&#13;
a deep toke and tossed it back out&#13;
into the audience. He was enjoying&#13;
the Halloween party as&#13;
much as the party was enjoying&#13;
him.&#13;
Reed finished the performance&#13;
with the Velvet Underground's&#13;
classic song, "White Light-White&#13;
Heat," in which both Reed and&#13;
the organ player removed their&#13;
shirts while white light throbbed&#13;
behind the drummer.&#13;
Reed and his band left the stage&#13;
amidst thunderous clapping as&#13;
the crowd applauded for a full&#13;
fifteen minutes. Finally, Reed&#13;
came back out and sang the song&#13;
everyone was waiting for, "Rock&#13;
and Roll." The band did a version&#13;
that featured a very fine lead&#13;
guitar solo.&#13;
Lou Reed did an excellent&#13;
concert on Halloween in&#13;
Milwaukee and made David&#13;
Bowie's performance last month&#13;
look pretty bad. The only&#13;
drawback to the concert was the&#13;
bad P.A. system not being able to&#13;
convey the lyrics of Reed's songs&#13;
adequately enough. His lyrics&#13;
would have shown how his body&#13;
motions were related to the&#13;
images. All in all, it was enough&#13;
to make you want to give up trick&#13;
or treating.&#13;
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Jaskiorceconteit Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER S&#13;
United council wins award&#13;
Two prop.osals for an over-all recognize facultv W W als for an over-all recognize fa on it v&#13;
plan to permit collective a udque. more&#13;
bargaining by faculty on wages, form of decision makfne for&#13;
3 h&#13;
^&#13;
e&#13;
„!.™ited »d its J3g. StoS&#13;
economic issues-without upsetting&#13;
traditional faculty control&#13;
of academic matters-were&#13;
awarded a total $1,500 in prizes&#13;
Friday by a judging panel of four&#13;
UW System Regents.&#13;
Dennis H. Blumer of the&#13;
University of Maryland and Neil&#13;
Bucklew of Central Michigan&#13;
University evenly split the&#13;
award.&#13;
Meanwhile, a $500 prize for the&#13;
best single idea also was equally&#13;
divided. Half was awarded to&#13;
Prof. Michael Bleicher, a&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Madison&#13;
faculty union local leader who&#13;
proposed a method for preventing&#13;
faculty strikes as well as a&#13;
means of exempting individual&#13;
faculty from union membership&#13;
if collective bargaining comes to&#13;
the campus.&#13;
The United Council of&#13;
University of Wisconsin Student&#13;
Governments received the other&#13;
half of the award for a proposal&#13;
that students be included in&#13;
faculty-state collective&#13;
bargaining. Faculty and students&#13;
would negotiate first, before the&#13;
faculty negotiated with the state.&#13;
The supporting rationale is that&#13;
student fees and tuition would&#13;
finance 25 percent of any faculty&#13;
salary increases achieved in&#13;
collective bargaining.&#13;
Blumer is presently the&#13;
executive assistant to the&#13;
chancellor of the University of&#13;
Maryland and was formerly head&#13;
of the Academic Collective&#13;
Bargaining Information Service&#13;
in Washington, D.C. Bucklew is a&#13;
vice president of Central&#13;
Michigan University. Blumer&#13;
and Bucklew are considered&#13;
among the foremost experts on&#13;
the rising phenomena of&#13;
collective bargaining among&#13;
college and university faculty.&#13;
Each man submitted a separate&#13;
plan, but in the opinion of the&#13;
judges, the two were so similar&#13;
and complementary that&#13;
together they made a very well&#13;
developed proposal deserving the&#13;
prize for the most innovative.&#13;
Instead of calling for&#13;
traditional collective bargaining&#13;
on all issues on the university&#13;
scene, the Blumer and Bucklew&#13;
proposals limit bargaining to&#13;
economic issues and then&#13;
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»^&#13;
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,0,he&#13;
th^sS!&#13;
eicher&#13;
'&#13;
who won ha,f&#13;
°&#13;
f&#13;
the $500 prize, is former chairman&#13;
uw-Madison campus&#13;
math department and currently&#13;
president of the United FacultyAmerican&#13;
Federation of&#13;
Teachers local on the Madison&#13;
campus. Bleicher's entry&#13;
represents his and not the United&#13;
Faculty's thinking. His basic idea&#13;
is to avoid strikes by requiring&#13;
r.u faculty put a Percentage&#13;
ot their salaries into an escrow&#13;
fund to be matched by an even&#13;
greater amount from the state&#13;
instead of stopping work in a&#13;
strike. Then, if the impasse&#13;
between the faculty and state&#13;
continued for too long a time,&#13;
there would be the possibility of&#13;
losing their dollars in escrow on a&#13;
schedule increasing with the&#13;
length of the impasse.&#13;
Bleicher's plan recognizes that&#13;
in a strike between the faculty of&#13;
a public university and the state,&#13;
neither of the two parties really&#13;
has a stake in the outcome akin to&#13;
the stake of the other affected&#13;
party-the students and the&#13;
taxpayers.&#13;
The student group which&#13;
shared the $500 prize is the United&#13;
Council of University of&#13;
Wisconsin Student Governments&#13;
which represents 110,000 students&#13;
in the 140,000 student UW System.&#13;
The proposal of the faculty&#13;
negotiating with the students&#13;
before negotiating with the state&#13;
is based, not only on the premise&#13;
that the students pay 25 percent&#13;
of any monies the teaching&#13;
faculty receive, but also that&#13;
three-sided bargaining-faculty,&#13;
state, student-is not realistic.&#13;
Hence, the United Council&#13;
proposal is directed towards a&#13;
two-stage, two-sided bargainingfaculty&#13;
and student; then faculty&#13;
and state.&#13;
The UW System Regents announced&#13;
the contest in July. They&#13;
indicated that they were&#13;
"seeking innovative" ideas from&#13;
within the American academic&#13;
community, as well as from&#13;
knowledgeable non-academics.&#13;
They wanted ideas which would&#13;
solve the real problems of&#13;
university faculty while doing as&#13;
much as possible to lessen or&#13;
avoid the adversary nature of&#13;
collective bargaining.&#13;
For the prizes, the Regents&#13;
used $2,000 given to them by The&#13;
Johnson Foundation of Racine,&#13;
Wis. to support research or&#13;
otherwise to explore the&#13;
ramifications of faculty collective&#13;
bargaining. They offered a&#13;
$1,500 a ward for the best single&#13;
idea.&#13;
The contest was conducted by&#13;
the UW System Regents in&#13;
connection with the work of a&#13;
special Task Force made up of&#13;
regents, legislators, faculty&#13;
leaders, labor leaders, industrialists&#13;
and students. The&#13;
Task Force is systematically&#13;
studying the subject.&#13;
In announcing the winners of&#13;
the contest, Regent John M.&#13;
Lavine, the Task Force chairman,&#13;
said the group was&#13;
"overwhelmed and very grateful&#13;
for the quantity and quality of the&#13;
entries received."&#13;
"There were 75 entries from&#13;
across the states. They ranged in&#13;
length from one to forty pages&#13;
and were submitted by private&#13;
citizens, lawyers who specialize&#13;
in industrial relations,&#13;
academics, students...In total&#13;
one set of all of the entries&#13;
weighed over six pounds."&#13;
Lavine emphasized that "the&#13;
choosing of the winners does not&#13;
indicate endorsement of their&#13;
ideas either by the UW Board of&#13;
Regents or the Regents' Task&#13;
Force on University Governance&#13;
and Collective Bargaining."&#13;
"Rather, while the four regents&#13;
who judged the contest believe&#13;
that these are innovative ideas&#13;
which could go a long way to&#13;
lessen adversary relations, the&#13;
purpose of the contest was to&#13;
generate for the Regent Task&#13;
Force all of the ideas from all of&#13;
the entries; the Task Force&#13;
received copies of each entry. It&#13;
is likely that in its work the Task&#13;
Force will use variations of many .&#13;
ideas found not only in the winning&#13;
entries, but also in many of&#13;
the other entries. Because of this,&#13;
everyone should understand that&#13;
while worthy of substantial merit&#13;
and consideration, the winning&#13;
entries are not endorsed and may&#13;
or may not be used in whole or in&#13;
part by the Task Force."&#13;
UW-P to host crime forum&#13;
Two nati onal ly-k now n&#13;
aut hor itie s on crime and&#13;
delinquency will keynote sessions&#13;
of a citizen conference on&#13;
criminal justice titled "Strantegies&#13;
to Reduce Crime" on&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 9, at Parkside.&#13;
Registration for the day-long&#13;
session beginning at 8:30 a.m.&#13;
can be made by contacting the&#13;
University Extension office at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Milton Rector, president of the&#13;
National Council on Crime and&#13;
Delinquency and a former&#13;
director of parole services in Los&#13;
Angeles, will keynote the morning&#13;
sessions.&#13;
Jerome Miller, advisor to the&#13;
Governor of Illinois on Juvenile&#13;
Justice and a former Commissioner&#13;
of Youth for the state&#13;
of Massachusetts, will keynote&#13;
afternoon sessions.&#13;
Following the keynote addresses,&#13;
conference participants&#13;
will attend workshops on community&#13;
crime prevention, law&#13;
enforcement, courts, corrections&#13;
and rehabilitation, chaired by&#13;
resource persons from various&#13;
community agencies. Morning&#13;
workshops will compare Racine&#13;
as a laboratory community to&#13;
national criminal justice standards&#13;
and goals. Afternoon&#13;
workshops will focus on citizen&#13;
involvement in reducing crime.&#13;
The conference is sponsored by&#13;
University Extension, and the&#13;
Racine Branch of the American&#13;
Association of University Women&#13;
in cooperation with Parkside, the&#13;
Joh nso n Fou nda tio n, Racine&#13;
Crime C o m m ission , Racine&#13;
Office of Urban Concern, Racine&#13;
Unified School District Departments&#13;
of Personnel and Guidance&#13;
and the Racine Bar Association,&#13;
Junior League, Lawyer's Wives&#13;
and League of Women Voters.&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday / Nov. 6, 1 9 7 4&#13;
"Walter&#13;
Ulbrichts&#13;
Old friends,&#13;
Winter companions,&#13;
The old men&#13;
Lost in their overcoats,&#13;
Waiting for the sunset.&#13;
"Old Friends" by Paul Simon&#13;
HARRY AND TONTO&#13;
Searching for America and oneself is not the exculsive property of&#13;
the young. As long as we breathe and dream, our hands itch to grasp&#13;
the horizon.&#13;
In "Harry and Tonto" director-author Paul Mazursky introduces&#13;
Geritol to "Easy Rider", creating a modern allegory of man's&#13;
restlessness and ignorance. 72 year old Harrv (Art Carney) is the&#13;
geriatric variation to Every-man, proud, vital, and falsely selfconfident.&#13;
Evictedfrom his New York apartment, an elephant's&#13;
graveyard of brittle memories, Harry picks up his cat Tonto to search&#13;
for a new life.&#13;
The opening montage of old people pushed by traffic focuses Harry's&#13;
alienation. He is out of step with time, struggling to get the latest&#13;
edition of the Times. A former English teacher, Harry cannot "read"&#13;
the headlines. His neighborhood, like his body and spirit, is&#13;
deteriorating. He has been mugged four times; his home is being&#13;
replaced by a parking lot.&#13;
Harry's friend Jacob, a lonely, pathetic Marxist echoes the blind&#13;
desperation of old age. He insists that capitalism is the common&#13;
enemy of everything and "must be fought in the streets."&#13;
Harry symbolically takes his advice. He first travels to the streets of&#13;
the suburbs and moves in with his son's family. But Harry's intrusion&#13;
accelerates the family's disintergration. Getting up one night "to&#13;
relieve his old body", Harry is mistaken for a burgler by his pistoltotin'&#13;
son. Grandpa comes to dinner, but no one recognizes him.&#13;
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Harry follows the setting sun to Chicago, intending to visit his&#13;
daughter (Ellen Burstyn). But contemporary insensitivity frustrates&#13;
his life and journey. At the airport Tonto must be separated from&#13;
Harry for security clearnace. Harry takes the bus then, but neither&#13;
time nor Greyhound waits for Tonto to take a piss.&#13;
Harry buys a customized '55 Chevy "with no passing power" and&#13;
picks up Ginger, a 16 year old runaway and alter ego. There exists no&#13;
generation gap for them because both are fleeing unpleasant realtities&#13;
for effervesent fantasies. Ginger is escaping to a Colorado commune;&#13;
Harry retreats to his memories of old lovers.&#13;
Hequickly leaves Chicago (It's much colder here") for a transfer at&#13;
Monument Valley, Arizona. Too close to his final destination at&#13;
Hollwood-the last refuge for dreams and illusions-he detours and&#13;
thumbs a ride to Las Vegas. Picked up by a hooker, Harry gambles at&#13;
sex and craps. In jail, Harry loses his pragmatism and pride. A&#13;
medicine man, Chief Two Feathers (Chief Dan George) relieves&#13;
Harry's bursitis.&#13;
Harry loses his identity and Tonto in Hollywood. His son (Larry&#13;
Hagman) comments that Harry "looks like a Hollywood extra."&#13;
Ironically, both father and son scrape the bottom of the barrel: they're&#13;
broqe, dispossessed, and lonely.&#13;
Harry's odyssey comes full circle on a beach in Southern California.&#13;
He sits down to a game of c hess, a reference to Ingmar Bergman's&#13;
game with Death in "The Seventh Seal", but runs away from it to&#13;
chase an illusion of Tonto. Finally, Harry meets a boy building a large&#13;
fortress of sand castles, a mirror image of his own futile actions.&#13;
Harry peacefully smiles at the child (in himself) and at the sunset ( of&#13;
his life).&#13;
"Harry and Tonto" is a fresh interpretation of an old story-man&#13;
meets death. It is vibrant, poignant, and instructive.&#13;
However, Paul Mazursky is sometimes heavy-handed with the&#13;
symbolism and strained situations. Art Carney's great performance&#13;
often collapses under the weight of rhetoric which replaces feeling&#13;
with philosophy.&#13;
Concert Nov. 7&#13;
UWP symphony&#13;
Bach's Orchestral Suite No. 4 in&#13;
D Major.&#13;
Prof. Littrell, who joined the&#13;
Parkside faculty in 1973, received&#13;
his bachelor's degree at Kansas&#13;
State University and his master's&#13;
degree at the University of&#13;
Texas-Austin.&#13;
He appeared as soloist with the&#13;
Topeka (Kans.) Symphony at 16,&#13;
won the Wichita Symphony's&#13;
Naftzger Prize in 1970 and was a&#13;
finalist in the Music Teachers&#13;
National Association Contest in&#13;
Chicago in 1971. He formerly was&#13;
assistant principal cellist with&#13;
the Austin Symphony and&#13;
currently plays in the Kenosha&#13;
and Racine Symphony Orchestras&#13;
and with the Parkside&#13;
Piano Trio and Parkside&#13;
Chamber Players.&#13;
Regents&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Symphony Orchestra&#13;
will present a free public concert&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 7,&#13;
in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. David Littrell will&#13;
conduct.&#13;
Mary Manulik, a Parkside&#13;
sophomore from Kenosha who is&#13;
majoring in paino and cello, will&#13;
be piano soloist with the orchestra&#13;
for Mozart's Concerto&#13;
No. 20 in D Minor, K 466. Miss&#13;
Manulik was the 1974 winner of&#13;
the Kenosha Symphony Youth&#13;
Auditions and is a member of t he&#13;
Kenosha orchestra's cello section.&#13;
She studies piano with&#13;
Stephen Swedish and cello with&#13;
Lttrell.&#13;
The Parkside orchestra also&#13;
has programmed Mendelssohn's&#13;
Overture to Ruy Bias and J.S&#13;
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continued from page 1&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside for appropriate&#13;
consideration under the&#13;
interim guidelines on implementation&#13;
of 36.09(5) a dopted&#13;
by the board on Oct. 4, 1974."&#13;
In a discussion prior to the&#13;
board vote, Regent Pelisek cited&#13;
that "a full hearing on the&#13;
petition at this time would appear&#13;
to be a circumvention of our prior&#13;
determination that each unit&#13;
should do the upmost to implement&#13;
the letter and spirit of&#13;
section 36.09(5) at the local&#13;
level."&#13;
Regent Roy Kopp, Platteville,&#13;
further supported Pelisek's&#13;
motion by saying that "I can best&#13;
summarize my view in saying&#13;
that normally we exhaust our&#13;
remedy in the lower court before&#13;
we go to a higher court: There are&#13;
exceptions in the higher court in&#13;
unusual cases, but, clearly, this is&#13;
not a matter that should be&#13;
considered by the board until&#13;
every opportunity has been&#13;
exhausted on the Parkside&#13;
campus."&#13;
Regent Ed Hales, Racine, was&#13;
the only one who spoke in support&#13;
of the petition during the&#13;
discussion, citing that certain&#13;
"misunderstandings" of the&#13;
implementation bill on the local&#13;
level should be cleared up.&#13;
Following the Regents'&#13;
decision, members of PSGA and&#13;
Siefert expressed concern over&#13;
the petition ruling. Specifically, it&#13;
appeared that various members&#13;
of the board of Regents had not&#13;
obtained a copy of the petition,&#13;
nor its accompanying memo by&#13;
Pelisek.&#13;
Furthermore, during the&#13;
Regents' discussion, Pelisek&#13;
stated that "I advised him&#13;
(Siefert) on Monday that this&#13;
matter would be presented to the&#13;
Regents. I was hoping that&#13;
Siefert would indicate his side to&#13;
you."&#13;
In a telephone interview with&#13;
Siefert Monday, Siefert stated&#13;
that he had found out about the&#13;
Regents' meeting on Friday,&#13;
Nov. 1 at 1:00 p.m., by mail.&#13;
"Mr. Pelisek did not talk to me&#13;
at any time prior to the Regents'&#13;
meeting," said Siefert. "He&#13;
corresponded with me by mail in&#13;
a late letter dated Oct. 28, mailed&#13;
on Oct. 30 th according to its&#13;
postmark, and received on Nov. 1&#13;
in the afternoon."&#13;
In further questioning, Siefert&#13;
remarked that the Regents "are&#13;
not acting in good faith, quite&#13;
clearly." He added that "the&#13;
petition will be petitioned for&#13;
judicial review in the Circuit&#13;
Court of Dane County."&#13;
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CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
There is a $1.00 charge for classified ads.&#13;
Just fill in this form and send it to: Ads will run for one week&#13;
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Business Office&#13;
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only. Renewals can be made&#13;
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ssc&#13;
Student problem* «irPTj&#13;
Financial aid hearings&#13;
On N ovember 15th and 16th the&#13;
Student Advisory Committee of&#13;
the College Scholarship Service&#13;
(a panel of students from across&#13;
the country concerned with&#13;
student financial aid) will conduct&#13;
a series of public hearings&#13;
on financial aid. These hearings&#13;
will be held in the state capitol in&#13;
Madison. The two days of&#13;
hearings will, according to a&#13;
spokesman for the Committee,&#13;
"expose to the public problems&#13;
which students in the State of&#13;
Wisconsin have experienced in&#13;
learning about, applying for and&#13;
obtaining student financial aid."&#13;
The Student Advisory Committee&#13;
plans to hear testimony&#13;
from students attending both&#13;
public and private collegiate and&#13;
vocational institutions.&#13;
The Committee intends to&#13;
make a complete public record&#13;
of first hand student experiences&#13;
with financial aid in the State of&#13;
Wisconsin. Seth Brunner from&#13;
California, the chairman of the&#13;
nationwide group said, "institutions,&#13;
financial aid officers&#13;
and administrators have all had&#13;
many opportunities to describe&#13;
student problems, but we feel&#13;
that students haven't been&#13;
directly asked to describe their&#13;
own problesms. We intend to hear&#13;
students talk about student&#13;
problems."&#13;
Brunner went on to say that the&#13;
CSS Student Advisory Committee&#13;
intends to run similar public&#13;
hearings throughout the country&#13;
in a nationwide attempt to collect&#13;
first hand data on student&#13;
financial aid problems. The CSS,&#13;
Student Committee is particularly&#13;
interested in investigating&#13;
:&#13;
--the "expected family com&#13;
tribution" (a determination&#13;
made before any financial aid is&#13;
awarded). It has been widely&#13;
suggested that significant&#13;
discrepancies exist between what&#13;
the "expected" contribution is,&#13;
and what many families can&#13;
actually come up with in the&#13;
current era of inflation.&#13;
—the determination of an&#13;
"independent student" for obtaining&#13;
financial aid-^what&#13;
constitutes independence from&#13;
one's parents?&#13;
—have older students, nontraditional&#13;
students and veterans&#13;
been treated equitably under the&#13;
current financial aid practices?&#13;
—have student encountered&#13;
problems in learning about&#13;
available financial aid? Are the&#13;
current information services&#13;
adequate?&#13;
Students from the UW System,&#13;
the vocational schools and the&#13;
private institutions are encouraged&#13;
to present their experience&#13;
with financial aid in&#13;
Wisconsin. If you would like to&#13;
appear before this committee&#13;
please contact Peter Coye at 263-&#13;
3644 or 257-7505.&#13;
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continued from page 1&#13;
said that usually a chancellor&#13;
must have at one time been a&#13;
professor, have a Ph.D., have&#13;
som e a d m i nis tra tiv e&#13;
background, and have the ability&#13;
to communicate to groups outside&#13;
the University.&#13;
Dearborn said, "I hope they&#13;
look for administrative ability&#13;
instead of the number of books&#13;
written."&#13;
Dearborn said he doesn't plan&#13;
on applying for the position as&#13;
chancellor since the job isn't in&#13;
his field and he probably wouldn't&#13;
qualify.&#13;
"I'm very sensitive to the&#13;
whole thing," Dearborn said.&#13;
"I'm one of t he last to remain of&#13;
the old administration and want&#13;
to continue what we started. I can&#13;
do best where I am."&#13;
Dearborn commented that he&#13;
hoped Otto Bauer, Acting&#13;
Chancellor, would apply for the&#13;
job. "I think highly of Bauer. I&#13;
want him to have as good a&#13;
chance as anybody else."&#13;
There would be advantages and&#13;
disadvantages of having the&#13;
chancellor chosen from within&#13;
Parkside, as well as from outside&#13;
of the institution, said Dearborn.&#13;
"Chancellor Wyllie always&#13;
wanted a good mix of people from&#13;
different places."&#13;
When questioned on the&#13;
possibility of changes in Parkside&#13;
being brought about by a new&#13;
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chancellor, Dearborn said, "Any&#13;
chancellor places his mark on an&#13;
institution, particularly a new&#13;
one."&#13;
Bauer declined comment when&#13;
questioned on who possible&#13;
candidates for the position might&#13;
be, but said, "The SSC will be a&#13;
very confidential operation. They&#13;
probably won't announce the&#13;
names of the candidates during&#13;
the process. I probably won't&#13;
even be informed myself as to&#13;
who they are."&#13;
When asked if h e himself would&#13;
apply for the position as chancellor,&#13;
he said that it was inappropriate&#13;
for him to discuss that&#13;
at the present time and indicated&#13;
that he would have to wait until&#13;
the SSC was established and&#13;
certain guidelines set.&#13;
O&#13;
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8 THE PARK SIDE RANG ER Wedn esda y, No v . 6, 1974&#13;
Cross&#13;
country&#13;
record&#13;
The Parkside cross country&#13;
team ended a successful Dual&#13;
Meet season here on Oct. 29 with 4&#13;
wins and 1 loss.&#13;
Carthage College captured the&#13;
meet with a team total of 46&#13;
points.Parkside took second with&#13;
54 p oints while Loras College of&#13;
Iowa finished third with 68 points.&#13;
Individually, Parkside's&#13;
Lucian Rosa placed first in the&#13;
five mile with a record-breaking&#13;
performance of 24 minutes and&#13;
40.7 seconds.&#13;
Wayne Rhody, also of&#13;
Parkside, placed third in the fine&#13;
mile with a time of 26 minutes&#13;
and 18 seconds.&#13;
Ticket&#13;
sales&#13;
begin&#13;
The basketball season is just&#13;
around the corner, with the&#13;
opening game scheduled for&#13;
Saturday evening, Nov. 30 with&#13;
UW-Whitewater.&#13;
There has been a change in&#13;
ticket sales this year with the&#13;
addition of a reserved seating&#13;
section. All tickets for the north&#13;
side of the gymnasium will be&#13;
sold on a reserved seat basis&#13;
only. The south side will be open&#13;
to general admission as was in&#13;
the past.&#13;
Reserved seat tickets will not&#13;
cost anymore, still $5.00 for&#13;
students, faculty and staff, and&#13;
$10.00 for general public. Tickets&#13;
may be purchased at the information&#13;
desk and at the&#13;
physical education building office.&#13;
&#13;
RANGER HOCKEY TEAM&#13;
1974-75 HOME SCHEDULE&#13;
November&#13;
9 Sat.&#13;
16 Sat.&#13;
24 Sun.&#13;
30 Sat.&#13;
Alumni&#13;
Purdue&#13;
UW-Eau Claire&#13;
Nor the ast ern Illino is&#13;
8:30 PM&#13;
4:30 PM&#13;
4:00 PM,&#13;
4:30 PM&#13;
December&#13;
7 Sat.&#13;
8 Sun.&#13;
13 Fri.&#13;
UW-La Crosse&#13;
Northern Illinois&#13;
UW-Milwaukee&#13;
8:30 PM&#13;
4:00 PM&#13;
8:30 PM&#13;
January&#13;
10 Fri.&#13;
12 Sun.&#13;
18 Sat.&#13;
19 Sun.&#13;
31 Fri.&#13;
Beloit&#13;
Lawrence&#13;
Lewis&#13;
St. Norbert&#13;
UW-Whitewater&#13;
8:30 PM&#13;
4:00 PM&#13;
5:00 PM&#13;
4:00 PM&#13;
8:30 PM&#13;
February&#13;
2 Sun.&#13;
7 Fri.&#13;
8 Sat.&#13;
Marquette&#13;
UW-Stevens Point&#13;
Milwaukee Area Technical College&#13;
6:00 PM&#13;
5:30 PM&#13;
8:30 PM&#13;
March&#13;
8 Sat.&#13;
9 Sun.&#13;
Ripon&#13;
Northwestern University&#13;
4:30 PM&#13;
6:00 PM&#13;
Special Events for the month&#13;
Wed. Nov. 6 - Soccer vs. UW-GreenBay, 2:00 p.m.&#13;
Sun. Nov. 10 - Parkside Judo Tournament, 9:00 am-7:00 p.m.&#13;
Tues. Nov. 12 - Jackson Brown Concert, 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Sat. Nov. 23 - Ranger Invit. Swim Meet, 12 noon&#13;
Sat. Nov. 30 - Basketball vs. UW-Whitewater, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Campus Trap &amp; Skeet Tournament - Wed. evening, Oct. 30. Open to all&#13;
students, staff, faculty and employees of Parkside. Ask at information&#13;
desk for particulars or call L. Hein, 2162. Prizes and awards to winners!!!!&#13;
&#13;
Hockey season open&#13;
The Ranger ice hockey club&#13;
will open their pre-season this&#13;
Friday, Nov. 8, at 8:30 p.m., with&#13;
a home game against the Alumni.&#13;
It is in preparation for the&#13;
Rangers first season game&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 16, against&#13;
Purdue.&#13;
The Rangers this year will be&#13;
coached by Gary Cukla. Tom&#13;
Krimmel, last year's coach,&#13;
resigned.&#13;
Cukla, who had started playing&#13;
hockey many years ago at the&#13;
Polar Dome in Chicago, has since&#13;
gained experience playing and&#13;
coaching the Kenosha Flyers and&#13;
the Zion Jets.&#13;
Also, the Rangers this year will&#13;
be strenghtened with the addition&#13;
of eight new players. Three new&#13;
players that show much potential&#13;
are Bob Arneson, a goalie, John&#13;
Faust, playing defense and Jim&#13;
Hehls, a forward.&#13;
The Alumni will prove to be a&#13;
powerful oponent for the&#13;
Rangers.&#13;
Many of the Alumni are playing&#13;
semi-pro. Mike Broderick, who&#13;
played with the Rangers three&#13;
years ago, has since played with&#13;
the Milwaukee Admirals and the&#13;
Kenosha Flyers. Currently, he is&#13;
playing with the Zion Wings. He&#13;
will lead .the Alumni this Friday&#13;
against Parkside.&#13;
The Alumni will feature Mark&#13;
Tutlewski, Ron Eiffler, Tom&#13;
Krimmel, Bill Westerlund, and&#13;
the three Rosko brothers.&#13;
Drive&#13;
for RANGER&#13;
call 553-2295&#13;
£*noin(f tUe tfinedt&#13;
Ptyfa &amp; OiaUoH- fyoodi.&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA-551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
Just Stop In!&#13;
r Restaurant&#13;
Open:&#13;
Daily 6:00 A.M.-8:00 P.M.&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
County E &amp; G reen Bay Rd.&#13;
SKIERS&#13;
CROSS COUNTRY TOO!&#13;
20% OFF&#13;
WHEN THIS AD PRESENTED&#13;
, ^ ^ , NOVEMBER 7TH THRU 16TH&#13;
7&amp;e 7{Jewi-A6&lt;Mt£ S&amp;afr&#13;
203 - 6th Street, Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
RACINE'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE SPORTSWEAR FOR THE SPORT&#13;
SKI-SWIM-TENRIS-GOLF&#13;
roller skate&#13;
SHOW COLLEGE I.D. &amp;&#13;
SKATE FOR $1.25 ANY LATE&#13;
WEEKEND SESSION.&#13;
THURS.9:15-11:15&#13;
FRL&amp; SAT. 9:30-11:30&#13;
1825 SYCAMORE AVENUE&#13;
RACINE, WISCONSIN 53406&#13;
CALL 633-4493&#13;
Parkside A ctivities&#13;
Board presents:&#13;
9* %&#13;
TICKETS:&#13;
$4.00 U .W.-P students a dvance&#13;
$4.50 advance&#13;
$5.00 day of p erformance&#13;
with Special Guest&#13;
WENDT WALDHAH&#13;
UWParkside&#13;
PHY. ED. BUILDING&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
Tues,Nov. 1 2&#13;
TICKETS AVAILABLE:&#13;
JJ T apes &amp; Records - Racine, K enosha&#13;
Beautiful D ay - Racine&#13;
Brandt's, R acine&#13;
One S weet D ream, K enosha&#13;
Inlftmation D esk, P arkside&#13;
SKY KING PRODUCTIONS </text>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64838">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 3, issue 14, November 6, 1974</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64839">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64840">
              <text>1974-11-06</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64843">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="64844">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="64845">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64846">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
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        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64847">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64848">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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          <name>Publisher</name>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64851">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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    <tag tagId="90">
      <name>athletics</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="648">
      <name>chancellor irvin g. wyllie</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="829">
      <name>educational opportunity officer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="172">
      <name>otto bauer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="826">
      <name>secretary of the faculty</name>
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